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Deciphering how the “one country, two systems” relationship between mainland China and the financial hub of Hong Kong works can be difficult at the best of times, but the gulf between the two is glaringly apparent ahead of the 25th anniversary of the bloody crackdown on Tiananmen Square protests.

On a more personal scale, hundreds of groups of Hong Kong families and friends are expected to gather in their homes on the evening of June 4 to commemorate the event. That will include many people from mainland China, tens of thousands of whom have obtained Hong Kong residency since 1989. At the candlelight event, “in recent years we have noticed more people from mainland China,” said Richard Tsoi, the vice-chairman of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China.

When Hong Kong was returned to China in 1997 after decades of British rule, Chinese officials pledged to uphold the economic and political systems in place, including free speech and elections. But in recent years, many Hong Kong residents believe those democratic ideals have been squeezed by mainland officials, who are have placed pro-mainland leaders in government positions and clamped down on freedom of the press.

The Tiananmen Square anniversary, though, is such an important event for Hong Kong that stifling protests would backfire, participants and organizers say. On Sunday, thousand of people marched through central Hong Kong, some carrying mock coffins and tanks to commemorate the event:

In April, Hong Kong opened its Tiananmen Square memorial museum. Most Chinese “have a very blurred remembrance that something happened on June 4 – especially if they are young,” the museum’s organizer told Time Out Hong Kong.

That’s not to say, though, that information flows free in Hong Kong about the protests. The website for the Hong Kong Democratic Alliance and the June 4 museum have both been offline in recent days, due, the sites owners believe, to targeted denial of service attacks that has sent huge amounts of crippling traffic to the websites. “It is a kind of attack, probably with the intention of making the whole website not function in order to prevent people from getting information,” Tsoi said.

Greatfire.org, which tracks web censorship in China, said it could not determine the reason behind the websites’ outage, but that it was “likely these sites have been attacked and brought down on purpose.”